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unmerged(2377)

Field Marshal
Mar 28, 2001
3.374
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www.midwestchasing.com
Trinity, New Mexico July 16, 1945

The test bomb and its detonation device hung from the great iron tower twenty feet above ground for two days before the final test date, July 14th. Bastille Day.

Miles away in the observers’ station, the row of generals and scientists adjusted their binoculars. From here they could barely make out the iron tower that held the world’s first atomic bomb.

For General Leslie Groves the test today was the culmination of the last four years of his life’s work. To his right stood Enrico Fermi, the brilliant Italian physicist, still grumbling for the chewing out Groves had given him yesterday for taking wagers on whether the bomb’s nuclear chain reaction would ignite the atmosphere and incinerate the whole world--or just New Mexico.

To his left stood the civilian director, the unlucky man who’d replaced J. Robert Oppenheimer, the orginal director of the Manhattan Project. Tempers were still delicate around Alamogordo over the way FBI Director Edgar Hoover had blackballed the left-leaning Oppenheimer two years ago.

But all that was behind them now. Although they didn’t know how big the final blast would be, they expected it would be historic. In a corner a staff sergeant counted down the seconds. "If this bomb works," General Thomas Farrell predicted, "then the war is over."

As the sergeant got to "one," all eyes were glued to the iron speck on the horizon. At "zero" they all winced. Three seconds after zero they were licking their lips and starting to glance about. Yet there was nothing to react to.

At T plus eleven seconds the new civilian Director broke the silence. "I see a puff of smoke out there, Les." The phone rang and Director David Greenglass picked it up, nodded, and then addressed the room. "It’s the foreward observation post. They report hearing the boom from the detonator, but the Guillotine’s still standing. And the bomb’s intact, gentlemen.

"The war’s not over yet."

Moscow - October 1945

The fascists have been beaten in the west; Berlin and Germany are ours. Now it is time to destroy the Dragon in the east. In August, Red Army forces smashed through Japanese positions in Manchuria and invaded Northern Korea. Our American "allies" have nabbed Okinawa from Japan and are in the process of invading Kyushu. Comrade Stalin has other plans for Japan, however....

japan.jpg
 
The offensive against Japan was renewed on October 21st, with the invasion of South Korea. Attacks were launched against Chunchon and Seoul. Both were taken with minimal losses. Soon the whole of the peninsula fell under Soviet control with the island of Jeju falling on November 19th.

Meanwhile, American forces landed on Taiwan south of Taipei. Fanatical japanese defenses eventually pushed them back into the sea.

The invasion of Japan was launched in the middle of November, with Sapporo. The Soviet Pacific Fleet was ordered to head full speed to the Hokkaido coastline with 3 divisions to land in the northern part of the country. The first wave was massacred on the beaches; our initial estimate of only 1 division opposing us was greatly underestimated; it turns out 13 divisions were there. Our first invasion was a failure.

Normally this would enrage Comrade Stalin, but he had another target in mind, one that would greatly benefit our Chinese Communist Allies.



And that target would be Taiwan....

Positions on December 1.

korea.jpg
 
Even though Japan threw back the Allies on Taiwan, they were taken by complete surprised when Soviet forces stormed South West Taiwan on the morning of December 3rd. Weeks of bombardment by Allied bombers after the land debacle had reduced the defenders to a pathetic state. Kaohsiung quickly fell and the Red Army moved to secure the rest of Taiwan. Follow up reinforcements landed on the 14th.

The rest of Hokkaido fell to American forces by the middle of the month, and Tokyo came under increasing bombardment.

Taiwan was fully in control of the Red Army by early January 1946.

ScreenSave5.jpg
 
The war was limited to air combat until early April, when Soviet forces finally smashed through Japanese defenses on the Hiroshima beaches. 3 divisions under Zhukov anailated 2 militia units entrenched. For the next several weeks, the Pacific Fleet would steam back and forth from occupied Korea, sea lifting the Siberian army to the Japanese mainland.

hiroshima.jpg

Initial Soviet beachhead in Japan



By the beginning of May, Osaka had fallen to an assault; Japanese forces fell back in retreat in chaos. Tokyo came under Soviet artillery fire for the first time.

osaka.jpg

Occupied Osaka

After Japan's defeat at Osaka, resistance started to collapse. American forces landed in Nagoya and Kanazawa fell after a brief struggle. Chukov blasted into Niigata on May 21 and Tokyo was threatened for the first time.

The attack on Tokyo began a month later on June 27th. By July 4th, the Hammer and Sickle was waving over the Imperial Palace.

redtokyo.jpg


reichstag.jpg

Occupied Tokyo
 
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An operation Downfall AAR eh? I'm doing one, and I will play as Japan. How many transports do you have? Cause, if IIRC the soviets were in no position to launch a seabased invasion of Japan. Also, the western allies would not have landed on Sapporo, instead they would have taken Honshu first.

Regardless, you are making the battle for Japan be relatively bloodless. My campaign (hopefully ;) ) will force the soviets to content themselves with the Kurils, Korea, and millions of dead....
 
Looks like the establishment of North Japan is proceeding on Schedule. Wonder is we'll see a war to reunify Japan in the 50s?
 
An interesting AAR you have here Dan. I wonder, will you continue a brief history after the war is over? Imagine a "Communist Korea" and a "North/South Japan"...........

Also, you never know, Chiang might win a civil war too........ouch..........a "new" Cold War.........
 
Dhatori said:
I think that it might be a tad ahrd to split that Japan geographically... :D

How about "Scattered Republics of Japan" and "United Socialist Republics of Japan"? :p

And Chiang will not win the civil war! Somebody take that naughty Ksim3000 to the gulag! :p

NOOOOOOOOOO! NOT THE GULAG! :p

But still, yes, let us hope that "Chairman Mao" wins.........(still scared about that Gulag threat :p( but still, I think Japan could be divided like Korea........."The Democratic People's Republic of Japan" and "The Republic of Japan"? Sounds funny lol. But still, a good AAR, I look foward to your next update.
 
By the beginning of August, Japanese forces fell back to Akita. The final offensive in northern Japan was launched on the 17th. Over a month of intense fighting took place, by the 6th of September all of Japan had fallen except for the extreme south.

Konev launched a daring assault on Shikoku, conquering it on the 17th. All that remained was the city of Fukuoka. After 4 failed attacks, the city finally fell on October 21st.

Japan had fallen.

reds.jpg


victory.jpg
 
Victory! :) Like the screen says, Japan is divided, though not contiguously like Germany was. You have a few American zones matched with a Soviet sector. Interesting to see how they would work that out. Great AAR, Dan, it's good to see how much fun the scenarios can be.
 
Mettermrck said:
Victory! :) Like the screen says, Japan is divided, though not contiguously like Germany was. You have a few American zones matched with a Soviet sector. Interesting to see how they would work that out. Great AAR, Dan, it's good to see how much fun the scenarios can be.
I'm probably going to do a spinoff AAR if I can figure out how to create new battle scenarios and nations.
 
Or you could write a story to begin with, then continue on a battle scenario? Still, a divided Japan.........that I bet would be interesting.......also, most likely The Allies and The Soviets would swap territories around to make it more "adequate".